Lower Indian House Passes Anti-graft Bill
Topics: From the Wires, News
Supporters of Indian anti-corruption activist Anna Hazare sing at a protest in New Delhi, India, Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2011. Hazare began a three-day hunger strike in Mumbai Tuesday even as the country's Parliament prepared to debate legislation to create an anti-corruption watchdog. Hazare, who claims inspiration from Mahatma Gandhi has called his protest against corruption the second freedom struggle and has fasted three times already to garner support for his demands. (AP Photo/Gurinder Osan)(Credit: AP)NEW DELHI (AP) — The powerful lower house of India’s Parliament passed a contentious anti-corruption bill Tuesday after hours of fierce debate even as a protest leader began a three-day hunger strike demanding Parliament adopt his tougher proposals.
The “Lokpal” or watchdog bill was passed after several amendments suggested by opposition lawmakers. The bill now must be passed by the upper house and signed by the president before it comes into effect.
“Let us pass this bill because the people are waiting for us,” Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said at the end of an impassioned speech.
The bill was passed by voice vote by a majority of the members present. The lawmakers, however, rejected a portion of the bill that aimed to amend the constitution and make the watchdog a constitutional body because the government wasn’t able to garner the support of two-thirds of the members voting.
The legislative showdown is the culmination of months of angry political debate and public protests that brought tens of thousands of middle-class Indians fed up with rampant corruption into the streets and put a government battered by scandals deeper on the defensive.
Hoping to defuse activist Anna Hazare’s anti-corruption crusade, the government initiated debate Tuesday on a bill to create an anti-graft watchdog. But that failed to satisfy Hazare, who began his fast in India’s business capital, Mumbai, demanding the proposed ombudsman be made more powerful.
After close to six hours of debate, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh rose to defend the government’s bill, saying that the powers of the proposed watchdog needed to have checks in place.
“Let us not create something that will destroy all that we cherish all in the name of combating corruption,” he said.
“I urge all my colleagues in Parliament to rise to the occasion and look beyond politics to pass this law,” Singh said.
Hazare has called the government’s anti-graft legislation an attempt to fool the country.
Hazare’s main complaint with the anti-graft bill before Parliament is that the proposed corruption ombudsman would not have authority over the country’s top investigative agency, the Central Bureau of Investigation. He says the ombudsman position would be too weak without that authority.
In New Delhi, India’s Parliament began its debate with the government saying that the legislation maintained the “fine balance” between the powers of the legislature, the judiciary and the executive branch.




Comments are not enabled for this story.